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Dive into the research topics where Marc N. Elliott is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc N. Elliott.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2014

Associations Among Body Size, Body Image Perceptions, and Weight Loss Attempts Among African American, Latino, and White Youth: A Test of a Mediational Model

Anna E. Epperson; Anna V. Song; Jan L. Wallander; Christine M. Markham; Paula Cuccaro; Marc N. Elliott; Mark A. Schuster

OBJECTIVE Little is known about influences on weight loss attempts, yet about one-half report making such attempts during adolescence. The aim was to examine the relationships among weight loss attempts, body size, and body perception in racially/ethnically diverse young adolescents. METHODS 3,954 African American, Latino, and White 5th-graders completed the Self-Perception Profile-Physical Appearance Scale and questions regarding body perceptions and past and current weight loss attempts, and had their weight and height measured. RESULTS Latino youth most often and White youth least often reported weight loss attempts. Larger body size and negative body perception were related to more reported weight loss attempts in White and Latino youth. Body perception mediated the relationship between body size and weight loss attempts for White youth. CONCLUSION Motivations to lose weight appear to differ among racial/ethnic groups, suggesting that interventions for healthy weight control in youth may need to target racial/ethnic groups differently.


Academic Pediatrics | 2018

Improving Response Rates and Representation of Hard-to-Reach Groups in Family Experience Surveys

Sara L. Toomey; Marc N. Elliott; Alan M. Zaslavsky; Jessica A. Quinn; David J. Klein; Stephanie Wagner; Cassandra Thomson; Melody Wu; Sarah E. Onorato; Mark A. Schuster

OBJECTIVE Most US hospitals conduct patient experience surveys by mail or telephone after discharge to assess patient/family centeredness of care. Pediatric response rates are usually very low, especially for black, Latino, and low-income respondents. We investigated whether day of discharge surveying using tablets improves response rates and respondent representativeness. METHODS This was a quasi-experimental study of parents of patients discharged from 4 units of a childrens hospital. Parents were assigned to receive the Child Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) via an audio-enabled tablet before discharge or via mail at approximately 1 week postdischarge. Intervention and control conditions alternated by week. We compared response rates, child/respondent characteristics, and mean top-box scores between tablet and mail only arms. RESULTS Administering Child HCAHPS on a tablet was administratively feasible and did not interfere with the discharge process (median completion time, 12.4 minutes). The response rate was 71.1% (424 of 596) for tablet versus 16.3% (96 of 588) for mail only. Although the tablet response rate was higher in every subgroup, tablet respondents were more likely to be fathers (20.4% vs 6.4%; P = .006), more likely to have a high school education or less (17.5% vs 8.4%; P = .002), less likely to be white (56.8% vs 71.9%; P = .006), and more likely to be publicly insured (31.4% vs 19.8%; P = .02). Tablet scores were significantly higher than mail only scores for 3 of 17 measures. CONCLUSIONS The response rate for day of discharge tablet survey administration was >4-fold higher than with single-wave mail-only administration, with greater participation of hard-to-reach groups. These findings suggest tablet administration before discharge shows great promise for real-time feedback and QI and may transform the field of inpatient survey administration.


Archive | 2011

Propensity Scoring and the Relationship Between Sexual Media and Adolescent Sexual Behavior

Rebecca L. Collins; Steven Martino; Marc N. Elliott


Archive | 2014

Hospice Experience of Care Survey

Rebecca Anhang Price; Denise D. Quigley; Melissa Bradley; Joan M. Teno; Layla Parast; Marc N. Elliott; Ann C. Haas; Brian D. Stucky; Brianne Mingura; Karl A. Lorenz


Archive | 2014

Emergency Department Patient Experience of Care Survey

Robin M. Weinick; Kirsten Becker; Layla Parast; Brian D. Stucky; Marc N. Elliott; Megan Mathews; Chris Chan; Virginia Kotzias


Archive | 2018

Speaking Up and Walking Out

Steven Martino; Marc N. Elliott; Joshua Mallett; Nathan Orr; Sarah Gaillot; Amelia M. Haviland


Archive | 2017

Well-Child Care Redesign

Naomi A. Mimila; Paul J. Chung; Marc N. Elliott; Christina Bethell; Sandra Chacon; Christopher Biely; Sandra Contreras; Toni Chavis; Yovana Bruno; Tanesha Moss; Tumaini R. Coker


Archive | 2017

Measuring Patient-Centeredness of Care for Seriously Ill Individuals

Rebecca Anhang Price; Marc N. Elliott


Archive | 2017

What Matters Most to Whom

Rebecca L. Collins; Ann C. Haas; Amelia M. Haviland; Marc N. Elliott


Archive | 2017

Medicare Advantage and Fee-for-Service Performance on Clinical Quality and Patient Experience Measures

Justin W. Timbie; Andy Bogart; Cheryl L. Damberg; Marc N. Elliott; Ann C. Haas; Sarah Gaillot; Elizabeth Goldstein; Susan M. Paddock

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Mark A. Schuster

Boston Children's Hospital

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David J. Klein

Boston Children's Hospital

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Paul J. Chung

University of California

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Paula Cuccaro

University of Texas at Austin

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